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Men Into Space

  • TV Series
  • 1959–1960
  • 30m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
240
YOUR RATING
Men Into Space (1959)
Sci-Fi

The adventures of Colonel Ed McCauley, head of the American space program. He battles saboteurs, budget cuts, defective equipment and other problems in outer space.The adventures of Colonel Ed McCauley, head of the American space program. He battles saboteurs, budget cuts, defective equipment and other problems in outer space.The adventures of Colonel Ed McCauley, head of the American space program. He battles saboteurs, budget cuts, defective equipment and other problems in outer space.

  • Stars
    • William Lundigan
    • Joyce Taylor
    • Charles Herbert
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    240
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • William Lundigan
      • Joyce Taylor
      • Charles Herbert
    • 22User reviews
    • 1Critic review
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 nomination total

    Episodes38

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season

    Photos2

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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    William Lundigan
    William Lundigan
    • Col. Edward McCauley
    • 1959–1960
    Joyce Taylor
    Joyce Taylor
    • Mary McCauley
    • 1959–1960
    Charles Herbert
    Charles Herbert
    • Pete McCauley…
    • 1959–1960
    Tyler McVey
    Tyler McVey
    • Maj. Gen. Norgath…
    • 1959–1960
    Russ Conway
    Russ Conway
    • Gen. Devon…
    • 1959–1960
    John Sutton
    John Sutton
    • Air Vice Marshal Malcolm Terry…
    • 1959–1960
    Jeremy Slate
    Jeremy Slate
    • Capt. Barrett…
    • 1959–1960
    H.M. Wynant
    H.M. Wynant
    • Major Joe Hale
    • 1959
    Paul Langton
    Paul Langton
    • Maj. Dr. Warnecke…
    • 1959
    Harry Ellerbe
    Harry Ellerbe
    • General…
    • 1960
    Rand Brooks
    Rand Brooks
    • Major Canell…
    • 1960
    Del Russel
    • Johnny McCauley
    • 1959–1960
    Mike Keene
    • Colonel Swenson…
    • 1959–1960
    Charles Maxwell
    Charles Maxwell
    • Col. Frank Bartlett…
    • 1959–1960
    Jack Mann
    • Maj. Hall
    • 1959
    Jim Jacobs
    • Capt. Henry, Co-Pilot…
    • 1960
    Robert O'Connor
    • Sgt. Sparkman
    • 1960
    Angie Dickinson
    Angie Dickinson
    • Mary McCauley
    • 1959
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews22

    7.6240
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    Featured reviews

    t442163

    As I recall viewing this show as a 6 year old.

    This was a quite good pre-Mercury attempt to show the future of space travel with emphasis on the team work of the crews involved. I recall shows dealing with landing on the moon and what man would find there. As well as working on building a space station and what would be involved. It did try to be factual but took dramatic license on a number of occasions.

    I am possibly the only one who still has his official Col. McCauley space helmet (still in the original box).
    PhilK-2

    I was going on eleven

    I think it was on Wednesday nights. It was absolutely my favorite program at that time. I have never seen a single clip of this show since it went off the air. The only scene from an episode I can remember is the time Col. McCauley got separated from his space craft and started drifting away in space. All he did was repeat his name: "McCauley.....McCauley...." until he was located and rescued. Around 10 years later I remembered this scene while watching "2001: A Space Odyssey" when the astronaut, Dr. Frank Poole, was terminated by the HAL 9000 computer and was left to drift in space. I kept expecting to hear Poole repeat his name. But it was not to be. Poole was expendable. McCauley wasn't.
    md6778

    Cool Sci-Fi for the period

    This show was another that vanished after one season but appealed to the imaginations of kids with unfamiliar concepts as weightlessness and a "hard vacuum". The show featured the McCauley character and crew blasting off on missions in a standardized multistage (?) vehicle, and doing space walks, rendezvous and powered landings. One episode had McCauley rescue a colleague on a very small asteroid doomed for destruction. As they departed the asteroid, the viewer sees petroglyphic markings on the space rock evidently left by an alien civilization (is this the episode titled "Is There Another Civilization?"). Shows of this genre inspired a generation of scientists and science buffs.
    9XPDay

    It Made a Huge Impression

    Like several of us whom have commented, I was about seven years old when this show aired and it made a large and lasting impression on me. I actually negotiated a special Wednesday night bedtime in order to be able to see it. I wanted the Col. McCaulley helmet, but alas, we were of modest means in my household. When the Mercury and Gemini projects were underway, I felt that we were right on track and my friends and I would be pursuing our careers in space. I even majored in aero & astronautical engineering - just when the whole thing succumbed to post-Apollo apathy and Watergate nonsense. Imagine my disappointment. As time went on, I found fewer contemporaries that even remembered 1950's space movie and TV sci-fi, so I largely forgot about it. Then about 4 years ago I came across a source of the entire series of episodes on videotape (for $160). Unbelievable! Some of the episodes are exactly as I remembered them. And unlike a lot of childhood memories, the show turns out to be actually pretty good: It is more technically accurate than anything shown on TV since. You can spot actors like Robert Vaughn, James Coburn, Robert Reed (pre-Brady Bunch) and Angie Dickenson (as McCaully's wife in the pilot episode). One of the episodes was written by James Clavell (well before Shogun). For a while in the mid-1960's there was discussion of a sort-of sequel to be called "Beyond the Moon" that would feature 1970's missions envisioned by NASA with technical accuracy. TV Guide carried an article on it. But it never materialized and instead we got mindless stuff like "I Dream of Genie." Anyone interested in this should also look for "Riders to the Stars," "The Conquest of Space," and the recent "October Sky," all of which capture the time of Sputnik and big dreams. This is the way space (and sci-fi) should have been in our lifetime! I invite anyone interested in discussing this further to contact me.
    Uthman

    Possibly the most accurate "hard" sci-fi series of all time

    As with other reviewers, my impression of this never-syndicated, never-published-on-video series rests on childhood memories, in my case from age 7. However, at the time I had read a lot of popular books on the prospect of manned space flight, and "Men Into Space" resonated perfectly with the best that scientist-author Willy Ley and colleagues had to offer a 50's audience. As the episodes progressed, we witnessed man's first space flight, EVA, moon landing, and moon base operation. Space was depicted as silent (no "whooshing" spacecraft); multistage rockets were used; and full pressure suits were de rigueur.

    I suppose this series stood on the broad shoulders of the Heinlein-penned film DESTINATION MOON (1950), but you have to credit the TV show's producers with a level of scientific integrity not seen in in network sci-fi before or since.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Each episode of this series was budgeted at $50,000.
    • Goofs
      In the exterior shots of space, the stars are depicted as moving. In reality the stars would not have any apparent motion even from a moving space vehicle.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: No matter where he travels, one thing will always be the same: man himself. Human nature will not change in the strange outposts of space. There will always be love and hate, courage and fear, and even greed. This is the story of an expedition to a distant world that was brought to the brink of disaster by one man's greed.

    • Connections
      Referenced in La planète fantôme (1961)

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    FAQ17

    • How many seasons does Men Into Space have?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 30, 1959 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Space Challenge
    • Filming locations
      • Cape Canaveral, Florida, USA
    • Production company
      • ZIV Television Programs
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 30m
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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